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My family (mexican) Put confetti in eggs. Some of them have money and if you got confettu crack it in someones head ^_^
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Easter in Japan is totally nonexistent.
For some reason, it hasn`t been commercialized here. Or maybe it`s just outweighed by all the other stuff happening this time of year - sakura, new school year, etc. I don`t even know when Easter is. |
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Easter, on the other hand... And I think it would be equally as hard to find a child who`d ever heard of it. Easter, in my opinion, has just as much commercialization potential as, say, Valentine`s Day. Chocolate eggs, gift baskets to children, events, etc! |
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Missing the pre-subway era in Nagoya... The streetcars, the little 3-wheeled automobiles and not a single skyscraper. An okonomiyaki only cost 20-30 yen! 10 yen got you a big icecream bar. Only a few years ago.... :p |
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just for the record, i like knight scoop oh, easter...no there is not too much easter around here. |
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What I find funny, though, is the fact that a lot of "Westerners" expect us to celebrate their holidays when they celebrate none of ours. |
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The 20~30 yen okonomiyaki though... I know a place in 南区 that still only charges that much. :D At least I got here before Nagoya station towers were finished though. Watched the opening on TV and was very glad I wasn`t actually present, as it looked like people were crushing each other on their way in. Back to the topic (sort of) though - how long has Christmas been a fairly well known thing? Quote:
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In the 16th century, the first recorded Mass was held. There must not have been anything commercial about Christmas back then. Still it involved less than 1% of the Japanese population that were Christian. As you know Christianity was banned during the Edo period. It wasn't before 1900 when the general public came to know about Christmas. Meidi-ya started selling Christmas cakes in Tokyo in 1900 and from that moment on, we got hooked on the new "custom", as commercial and invented as they were. In 1925, the government issued the Christmas postage stamps and donated part of their sales to charity. People started holding parties where they drank champaign, ate cakes, exchanged presents, etc. So, apart from Christmas celebrated by real Christians in Japan, which seems to have a 500-year history, the history of Christmas celebrated in highly commecial ways by the general public looks to have a roughly 100-year history. . |
Eastsr
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the candy, chocolates,dying or coloring eggs, egg hunting is commercialized to gaing profit, but it is fun!!!! for the family, specieli for those whom don't want nothing to do with Christ. even on Christ-mas.:vsign: |
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